@booklet {2879, title = {"Houston, Houston, Do You Read?"}, howpublished = {Aurora: Beyond Equality}, year = {1976}, note = {

Rpt. in Star Songs of an Old Primate (New York: Ballantine Books, 1978), 164-226; in The Arbor House Treasury of Great Science Fiction Short Novels. Comp. Robert Silverberg and Martin H. Greenberg (New York: Arbor House, 1980), 582-632; under the title of the story New York: Tor, 1989 as part of Tor Double Novel $\#$ 11 bound with Joanna Russ\’s Souls; and in her Her Smoke Rose Up Forever ([Sauk City, WI:] Arkham House, 1990), 168-222.

}, month = {1976}, pages = {36-98}, publisher = {Fawcett Books}, address = {Greenwich, CT}, abstract = {

Feminist eutopia composed only of women, mostly clones but with a few new genotypes still being created, confronts men returning from a long space voyage. The eutopia came because an epidemic caused widespread infertility and no male babies were born. It has a small population and is without hierarchy or government and, while it has space travel, it is based more on agriculture than technology. The three men include an extreme chauvinist, a Christian who believes that God established a patriarchal system, and one man who struggles to understand and accept the situation.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Alice Bradley] [Sheldon] (1915-87)}, editor = {Vonda N[eel] McIntyre (1948-2019) and Susan Janice Anderson} }